The Trump administration recently published “America’s AI Action Plan”. One of the first policy actions from the document is to eliminate references to misinformation, diversity, equity, inclusion, and climate change from the NIST’s AI Risk Framework.
Lacking any sense of irony, the very next point states LLM developers should ensure their systems are “objective and free from top-down ideological bias”.
Par for the course for Trump and his cronies, but the world should know what kind of AI the US wants to build.
It’s not a mistake, I see that type of language a lot. If the language was specifically “Russia does X”, then it’s not a problem, because it’s referring to the government.
Nationalism sucks, and I’m trying to distinguish between the country doing a thing (i.e. its leadership) and the people doing a thing. The people in the US elected Trump, but the people in the US aren’t doing what Trump did, so it’s absolutely fallacious to say something like “Americans are deporting people,” when that’s being done by the administration, not everyday people.
That’s it.
Sure, maybe. But a lot more people would get riled up if we said “Israelis did this,” and then associate that with random Jewish people (most of whom have probably never been to Israel). Netanyahu/Israel doing a thing is quite different from Israelis doing a thing, because the latter has a lot more risk of lumping in non-Israelis into that nonsense.
Racism is certainly deeper than a headline/misconception, my point is that it can be stoked by loose language. Its that loose language that I’d like people to be more careful about.